FY2016 Managing Director`s Office Testimony

Transcription

FY2016 Managing Director`s Office Testimony
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE
FISCAL YEAR 2016 BUDGET TESTIMONY
APRIL 7, 2015
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
DEPARTMENT MISSION AND FUNCTION
Mission: To be the City of Philadelphia’s catalyst for continuous improvement and innovation, to serve, engage and
respond to Philadelphia’s citizens with focus, dedication, efficiency, integrity and adaptability.
Description of Major Services: The Office of the Managing Director is responsible for the coordination and
administration of a variety of City services and supervising several City operating departments and functions,
including the Office of Innovation and Technology, the Records Department, Department of Public Property, Office of
Human Resources, Office of Fleet Management, Procurement Department, Center of Excellence, the PhillyRising
Collaborative, Office of Special Events and Philly 311. These tasks are accomplished by prioritizing and communicating
key administrative initiatives, monitoring and analyzing the department’s performance and progress, and by serving
as a catalyst to encourage cooperation and collaboration. In addition, this office is responsible for organizing and
supervising major interdepartmental initiatives.
PROPOSED BUDGET HIGHLIGHTS/FUNDING REQUEST
Budget Highlights: The Managing Director’s Office’s (MDO) budget includes funding for activities that relate to each
of the Mayor’s five goals, including PhillyRising, Animal Control, and general administration of Philly 311.
Fund
General
Other*
All
FY16 Proposed
Budget
16,316,293
60,748,402
538,979
77,603,674
249
1,864,474
4,021,103
383,008
6,268,585
23
FY16-FY15
Change
(69,633)
(75,524)
(222,840)
(367,997)
(15)
(143,864)
200,672
8,235
65,043
(1)
FY16-FY15
Percent
Change
-0.4%
-0.1%
-29.3%
-0.5%
-5.7%
-7.2%
5.3%
2.2%
1.0%
-4.2%
FY08 Actual
8,034,882
43,744,489
1,214,583
52,993,953
95
1,228,447
864,115
256,010
2,348,572
9
FY14 Actual
15,697,637
58,437,131
508,630
74,643,397
279
1,296,738
1,804,797
242,752
3,344,286
23
FY15 Current
Projection
16,385,926
60,823,926
761,819
77,971,671
264
2,008,338
3,820,431
374,773
6,203,542
24
100
9,263,329
16,994,374
18,394,264
18,180,767
(213,497)
-1.2%
200
44,608,604
60,241,927
64,644,357
64,769,505
125,148
0.2%
Class
100
200
300/400
Total
Positions
100
200
300/400
Total
Positions
300/400
1,470,592
751,381
1,136,592
921,987
(214,605)
-18.9%
Total
55,342,525
77,987,683
84,175,213
83,872,259
(302,954)
-0.4%
Positions
104
302
288
272
(16)
-5.6%
* Other Funds includes: County Liquid Fuels Tax Fund, Special Gasoline Tax Fund, Healthchoices Behavioral Health Fund, Hotel Room Rental Tax Fund,
Grants Revenue Fund, Community Development Fund, Car Rental Tax Fund, Housing Trust Fund, Water Fund, Water Residual Fund, Aviation Fund, and
Acute Care Hospital Assessment Fund Undistributed Pension Fund.
Overall MDO has seen its total operating funds increase mostly due to the transfer of funds and programs to and from
other departments. IT activities were transferred to OIT in FY11; Animal Control was transferred from the Department
of Public Health in FY12; counsel fees ($8.8 million) were transferred from the First Judicial District to MDO in FY13;
and the Office of Reintegration Services became a City office under MDO in FY13 after having previously been a
contracted service. It will be transferred to the Philadelphia Prisons System in FY16. New programs have also been
created, such as PhillyRising, Philly 311, the Office of Sustainability (also scheduled to be transferred out in FY16), and
the Center for Excellence, which received General Fund appropriations and also brought in grant funding. As a result,
the General Fund allocation for FY15 is not comparable to FY08. The total FY16 Proposed Operating Budget decreased
by 5.6% primarily driven by the transfer out of MDO of the Office of Sustainability and the Office of Reintegration
Services.
Staff Demographics Summary (as of December 2014)
Full-Time Staff
Executive Staff
Average Salary - Executive Staff
Median Salary - Executive Staff
Total
Minority
White
Female
255
7
$144,941
$144,900
157
6
$150,123
$144,900
98
1
$113,850
$113,850
104
3
$139,725
$144,900
Employment Levels (as of December 2014)
Budgeted
Filled
264
0
7
255
0
7
Full-Time Positions
Part-Time Positions
Executive Positions
Contracts Summary (*as of December 2014)
Total amount of contracts
Total amount to M/W/DBE
Participation Rate
FY10
FY11
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15*
$1,437,971
$45,580
3%
$2,223,627
$657,896
30%
$36,574,621
$452,047
21%
$53,885,239
$201,975
15%
$52,267,435
$103,566
18%
$46,386,249
$45,000
7%
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.2
PERFORMANCE, CHALLENGES AND INITIATIVES
DEPARTMENT PERFORMANCE (OPERATIONS)
MDO tracks performance measures for the 311 and the Community Life Improvement programs.
Philly 311: In FY14, the total contacts for 311 decreased by 6.3%. As of the first half of FY15, 311 has had 140,346
contacts, 38% lower than the same time period in FY14 due to Hurricane Sandy that occurred in FY13 and resulted in
unusually high call volumes over a four day period when the Call Center was open 24 hours a day. The 311 contact
call center handles two types of requests: information and requests for City services. In FY14, 311 handled 503,452
information requests and 137,785 service requests. The average wait call time increased from FY13 to FY14 due to
more weather related events/emergencies in FY14 compared to FY15. It is important to note that the replacement
IVR did capture all of the telephone numbers that point into the 311 Call Center, therefore the number of calls
handled by the IVR from January through December 2014 was not reported. The problem has since been resolved.
Prior to the old IVR breaking down, the IVR handled 35%-40% of the calls coming into the Call Center; this means
customers received an answer to their inquiry from the IVR messages and did not need to speak with an agent. The
service levels have declined during FY14 due to the contact center’s Integrated Voice Response (IVR) breaking down,
increased call volumes due to snow related events, and agent staffing challenges (vacancies, absences, and new
hires). The IVR handles 30-40% of the calls into the center by providing information for the most frequently asked
questions, preventing the customer from needing to hold to speak to an agent. As of the first half of FY15, 74% of
calls have been answered within 45 seconds. The average call length decreased by 15 seconds from FY13 to FY14 and
is up as of the first half of FY15. As of the second quarter of FY14, 93% of 311 customers felt their expectations were
met or exceeded; 311 hopes to continue to exceed the industry standard of 85% in FY15. A new Customer
Relationship Management (CRM) system went live in the second quarter of FY15 and full implementation is scheduled
to be complete by the end of FY16. Although transitioning to the new CRM system could cause a temporary decrease
in performance, ultimately the CRM system is expected to improve service delivery currently experienced by 311
users, as described above.
Performance Measure
FY08
FY13
FY14
FY14FY13
Change
Total contacts (calls, email, website,
walk-in)
N/A
1,193,795
1,118,205
-6.3%
552,320
343,966
FY15FY14
Q1-Q2
Change
-37.7%
Information requests
Service requests
Average wait call time
Percent of calls answered within 45
seconds
Average call length
Percent of customers whose
expectations were met or exceeded
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
525,058
92,464
0:22
82.0%
503,452
137,785
1:37
60.8%
-4.1%
49.0%
343.2%
-25.9%
260,096
81,960
0:20
20:24
157,469
55,579
2:33
12:36
N/A
N/A
3:15
95.0%
3:00
92.9%
-7.6%
-2.2%
2:54
92.5%
3:39
92.5%
FY14
Q1-Q2
FY15
Q1-Q2
FY15
Goal
FY16
Goal
N/A
N/A
-39.5%
-32.2%
667.5%
-38.2%
N/A
N/A
N/A
80.0%
N/A
N/A
N/A
80.0%
26.1%
0.0%
N/A
85.0%
N/A
85.0%
Community Life Improvement Program (CLIP): CLIP consists of five subprograms: Graffiti abatement; the Community
Partnership Program, which provides supplies to community groups to do neighborhood clean-up projects;
Community Service, which is a structured program that has non-violent offenders complete their mandated
community service hours by assisting in citywide clean-up projects; Vacant Lot Program which inspects, issues
violations for and cleans vacant lots; and Community Life Improvement, which operates in the northeast and sections
of northwest Philadelphia to address external property maintenance issues. FY14 performance current estimates are
slightly lower than FY13 actual performance across the board due in large part to the extreme winter weather which
made it difficult to continue regular activities and caused some crew to be deployed for snow removal operations.
FY15 performance levels are expected to be in line with FY13 actual performance.
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.3
Performance Measure
FY08
FY13
FY14
FY14FY13
Change
Graffiti abatement: properties and street
fixtures cleaned
N/A
121,854
100,791
-17.3%
57,559
45,925
FY15FY14
Q1-Q2
Change
-20.2%
Graffiti abatement: percent of 311 graffiti
removal requests completed within 7 day
Community Partnership Program: groups
that received supplies
Community Partnership Program: Supplies
issued
Community Service Program: citywide
cleanup projects completed
Vacant Lot Program: Vacant lot
abatements
Vacant Lot Program: Vacant lot
compliance rate
Vacant Lot Program: Percent of vacant lots
addressed within 90 days
Community Life Improvement: Exterior
property maintenance violations
Community Life Improvement: Exterior
property maintenance compliance rate
N/A
81%
97%
19.4%
96%
100%
4.7%
95%
95%
N/A
685
573
-16.4%
303
332
9.6%
575
580
N/A
8,742
8,333
-4.7%
4,478
3,686
-17.7%
8,400
7,200
N/A
2,114
1,945
-8.0%
936
611
-34.7%
1,200
1,200
N/A
11,789
10,208
-13.4%
7,176
7,828
9.1%
13,000
15,000
N/A
31%
28%
-10.5%
26%
31%
19.6%
28%
28%
N/A
87%
70%
-19.3%
70%
61%
-12.9%
70%
70%
N/A
6,877
7,840
14.0%
4,403
4,160
-5.5%
7,800
7,800
N/A
71%
77%
7.8%
75%
74%
-1.7%
73%
73%
FY14
Q1-Q2
FY15
Q1-Q2
FY15
Goal
FY16
Goal
100,900
101,000
DEPARTMENT CHALLENGES
Office of Special Events (OSE): The number and scope of events managed by OSE has more than doubled since 2013,
growing from 500 to 1,400 in the current fiscal year. OSE is working to ensure the staff needs for events is met.
PhillyRising: There is a challenge in developing a performance system due to the difficulty in locating data beyond
crime and 311 that is detailed enough to compare inside and outside PhillyRising boundaries. Additionally, it is
difficult to find true control neighborhoods for comparison. PhillyRising is working to meet this challenge by
partnering with Temple University to develop a new system for performance measurement.
Philly311: In FY15, Philly311 will launch its new customer relationship management (CRM) system. Some challenges
are anticipated in the roll out of this new CRM as it will require management of time and staffing levels while current
employees are trained in use of the new system. However, Philly311 is excited about the opportunities this new
system will present.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS & INITIATIVES
Goal 1:
Criminal Justice Prison Population Management Unit: This Unit monitors the Philadelphia Prisons System population
and reviews and identifies individuals eligible for early release. The Unit identifies candidates for special release
according to the policies approved by the Population Management Policy Board in 1995 and, by signature of the
Director of the Criminal Justice Population Management Unit, will certify the confined person’s eligibility for special
release. This report is run twice weekly and staff attends hearings to authorize special release. Such controls have led
to effective monitoring of the prison census and a subsequent decrease in the prison census from approximately
9,100 in January 2008 to 8,158 in January 2015.
Office of Emergency Management: The Managing Director’s Office of Emergency Management (OEM) is responsible
for ensuring the readiness of the City of Philadelphia for emergencies of any kind. OEM educates the public on how to
prepare for emergencies, leads citywide planning and policy development related to emergency management and
coordination, mitigates the impact of emergencies, conducts training and exercises and coordinates on-scene
response and recovery operations.
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.4
OEM has been utilizing social media to assist with communications. In April 2008, the Southeast Pennsylvania region
launched ReadyNotifyPA, an emergency text and email alert messaging service that keeps the public informed during
large-scale emergencies. In 2014 there was a 5.6% percent increase in new subscribers registered on ReadyNotifyPA,
bringing the total enrollment on the system to 35,086. OEM is an active user of various social media platforms
including Twitter and Facebook and saw a 21.9% increase in membership/engagement across the various social media
tools it uses.
OEM offers a comprehensive public education program to engage Philadelphians and help them prepare for
emergencies, both natural and human-caused. In 2014, OEM lead or participated in 65 preparedness events ranging
from workshops with community groups, trainings with business and nonprofit organizations, or community outreach
events. As part of its public outreach efforts, OEM has preparedness brochures available in English and six other
languages, and has developed materials in large print and Braille and audio CDs for the visually impaired. More than
27,000 pieces of educational literature were distributed in 2014.
During the Nutter administration, OEM has worked to increase its capacity and efficiency, and has specifically focused
on improving the operational integrity of emergency response plans. OEM’s capacity and efficiency building has
focused on ensuring the city has necessary emergency response equipment and through the development of an
emergency management warehouse which opened in December 2014.
In FY16, OEM will continue its planning work focused specifically on the health and medical sector, a rewrite of the
City’s Mass Care and Shelter Plan, hazardous analysis density studies, and the development of community
vulnerability profiles. All of this will aid in the preparation and seamless execution for the Papal visit and Democratic
National Convention.
Additionally, OEM will focus on sustainment, expanding several programs, and embarking on some new initiatives in
FY16. These efforts include the development and launch of a new website and emergency management mobile
application, applying for accreditation from the Emergency Management Accreditation Program which is the
nationally recognized emergency management accreditation process, and expanding on and improving OEM’s work
with populations with functional and access needs to ensure our emergency management program is accessible by
everyone.
Office of Special Events (OSE): The Office of Special Events is responsible for the coordination and execution of city
services for more than 1400 events annually. The City of Philadelphia has proven time and time again that we have
the infrastructure and capacity to produce world-class special events, and is on the cutting edge of innovative public
safety tactics and stakeholder management.
In September of 2015, Philadelphia will be the first municipality in North America to host the World Meeting of
Families, an international gathering of members of the Catholic faith that drew over three million visitors to Milan,
Italy in 2012. Building on the history of successfully hosting the Republic National Convention in 2000, Philadelphia
has been selected as the city to host the Democratic National Convention in July of 2016. Big things come to our
region, and we are fully prepared to successfully negotiate these challenges.
The MDO is responsible for making sure that all the necessary permits, licenses, insurances and agreements with the
city are executed prior to any event that seek the use of, in or on city streets, city-owned or occupied property and/or
grant the right to construct any equipment at a specific site. In 2014, 1400 special event applications were processed.
The MDO also seeks reimbursement from event sponsors for the use of city services. We have a 95% collection rate
and recovers approximately $2M annually which is then reimbursed back to the city operating departments.
The Office of Special Events has made significant contributions in each of its primary areas:
•
Public Safety is the number one priority in keeping event participants safe. We partner with the Police
Department, Fire Department, Office of Emergency Management, Homeland Security, Secret Service, FBI and
many other law enforcement jurisdictions in the region. We ramp up and down as necessary or according to
any potential threat assessment.
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.5
•
•
•
The Office of Special Events is an active participant in the Citizen’s Engagement Academy. The “Special
Events Academy” is a 30-45 minute course that seeks to educate community members, merchants
and pertinent stakeholders about the basics of event management. The goal of the course is to provide
communities with the necessary tools and connections to produce high-quality street festivals and parades
that can drive positive economic impact to underserved communities and underutilized commercial
corridors. The Office of Special events also collaborates with the Commerce Department to host an annual
Festival Events Planning meeting to educate the Community Business Associations, Local Business
Establishments and Community groups on how to successfully put on an event and provide them with the
resources available to assist them in the planning of an event. We invite other City Departments to
participate in this endeavor to ensure that everyone is well informed on the requirements for submitting the
appropriate applications to the appropriate departments for processing.
The City is rich in venue selection and offers endless venue choices. We have an inventory of city owned
spaces used to host events and there are hundreds of other indoor/outdoor spaces used for the production
of films and/or any festival, parade or concert.
The Office of Special Events has gone green. We partnered with the Office of Sustainability and the
Department of Streets, Sanitation Division - and are mandating recycling and/or composting at events. We
are environmentally friendly and proactive.
The Office of Special Events was one the 2014 recipients of the International Festival and Events City Award along
with other World Class City Awardees - Dubai, Australia, and Brazil. In recent years, we have recognized a growing
trend in the number of festivals and events taking place in urban areas, both in our region and across the country.
Philadelphia has embraced this proliferation of special events as a tool not only to be used in the attraction of tourism
and visitors, but for economic development, urban revitalization and community building. The Special Events Office
encourages cooperation and collaboration on interdepartmental projects, as well as external initiatives.
The office oversees coordination and execution of city services for events such as film production, commercials,
parades, marathons, festivals and concerts with over 2 million participants annually. The city has demonstrated the
ability to produce large scale events and keep them safe.
In 2014, we added a position that manages the Special Events Webpage for citizen engagement, customer service,
newsletters, briefings to residents in local communities, the use of all social media mediums, best practices, calendar
production and visual documentation to help notify residents of upcoming events and street closures. This
information can be found at our website - www.phila.gov/mdo/specialevents
The Office of Special Events works closely with the Deputy Mayor of Public Safety, the Deputy Mayor of
Transportation, the Office of Emergency Management, the First Deputy Managing Director and all the operating
departments to ensure efficiency and safety.
PhillyRising: PhillyRising focuses on neighborhoods throughout Philadelphia that are plagued by chronic crime and
quality of life concerns and establishes partnerships with community members to address these issues. The
PhillyRising Team coordinates the actions of City agencies to help neighbors realize their vision for their community
through sustainable, responsive and cost-effective solutions. Since beginning as a pilot in February 2010, PhillyRising
has expanded to 15 neighborhoods and all six Police Divisions, as shown in the map below.
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.6
PhillyRising has had a major positive impact on
quality of life in target neighborhoods, and their
model of partnering with residents has proven to be
successful. In FY14, total crimes across PhillyRising
neighborhoods have decreased 14.4% since FY08. In
FY14 and FY15, PhillyRising hosted two annual
conferences to introduce community residents to
crucial resources. Based on the success of these
events, PhillyRising has begun to execute its newlydeveloped Best Meetings Strategy in individual
neighborhoods. At these action-oriented meetings,
residents can receive services from City agencies,
federal benefits providers, and other organizations on
the spot. At the first Best Meeting, held at the Dixon
House on March 21, 2015, 258 interactions took
place between guests and agency representatives.
Agencies recorded 209 action items (service requests,
benefits applications, and resource distribution) and
62 informational interactions.
In 2011, PhillyRising developed the Citizens
Engagement Academy (CEA) to empower residents to
take on leadership roles in their communities. This
program brings City agencies to the neighborhoods to
educate residents about the resources they offer. PhillyRising has hosted 11 CEAs and recently completed its first
Spanish-language CEA; 264 participants have graduated from the program. With the knowledge gained from the
course, CEA graduates are empowered to become leaders in their communities and help their neighbors connect to
City resources. Also in FY11, PhillyRising created a workforce development program called Career Boot Camp One as a
result of feedback received during kickoff meetings. The Career Boot Camp One provides job training and access to
job opportunities, particularly for youth and ex-offenders. Eleven boot camps have been conducted, including two
modified for youth and ex-offenders; 230 residents have participated, and 55 have received job interviews as a direct
result of attending this class. Through the PhillyRising CREATES grant, and in partnership with the City Mural Arts
Program and the Mayor’s Office of Civic Engagement and Volunteer Service, PhillyRising has completed nine murals
and revitalized 595,578 square feet of blighted space in seven neighborhoods. Collectively, these spaces have been
maintained free of graffiti, trash, and illegal activity for 256 weeks since January 2013.
During FY15 and FY16, PhillyRising is creating a new map-based method to evaluate neighborhood performance and
improvements using the Red Dot Green Dot model. Maps of each neighborhood will be continuously updated to show
negative incidents (i.e. violent crimes and code violations) and positive solutions. Additionally, with the expertise of
the Mayor’s Office of Community Empowerment and Opportunity, PhillyRising has added federal benefit registration
to its menu of services. Many of the residents that PhillyRising works with qualify for benefits like the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program through the federal government, home heating grants, and other forms of assistance
but are not aware of these opportunities or do not know how to access them. PhillyRising will make this process
easier and more accessible through initiatives like the Best Meetings.
Mayor’s Office of Reintegration Services (RISE): RISE has undergone substantial transformations since 2008.
Originally known as the Mayor’s Office of Reentry, or MORE, this became a division of the Managing Director’s Office
of Public Safety in FY 13, solidifying its importance in the framework of the City by directly focusing on re-entry
efforts. RISE has also expanded the breadth of services provided, working with other City agencies on transitional job
programming and service provision. In FY 16, RISE will officially become a division of the Philadelphia Prisons System,
as focus shifts to proactive and rehabilitative programming for those facing an impending release. RISE is also leading
a multi-year, multi-agency effort under an award of a Second Chance Act grant from the Department of Justice for
$750,000 which was matched by the City over two years. This demonstration grant will implement innovate strategies
for returning citizens, focusing on housing, education, and employment in new ways
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.7
RISE utilizes direct services and partnerships with other agencies to successfully reintegrate the formerly incarcerated
back into their communities. RISE recognizes that those that receive the skills, training and education necessary to
compete in the formal economy are far less likely to participate in criminal activity. RISE aims to improve public safety
while also assisting the formerly incarcerated in becoming responsible and productive Philadelphians by addressing
barriers that impede their chances for success. RISE has established the following goals:
• Act as an umbrella organization for re-entry programs and initiatives for returning citizens
• Establish a strong network of partner organizations to promote community-wide collaboration in re-entry
• Create programming and training that best suites the needs of returning citizens
• Provide returning citizens with the skills, knowledge and resources to obtain and retain employment
Town Watch Integrated Services: Operation Town Watch Integrated Services (TWIS) promotes neighborhood safety
by training neighborhood residents in the concepts of Community Policing and on how to form and operate a
neighborhood Town Watch group and by engaging institutions, community-based organizations, and local leaders in
the process of Community Policing. At the end of 2014, there are 893 Town Watch groups currently active in
Philadelphia. In 2014, TWIS staff trained and organized 160 Town Watch groups and facilitated 390 training sessions
in which a total of 1,325 residents received instruction in Community Policing. In addition, Town Watch, in
partnership with the School District of Philadelphia undertook WalkSafePHL, as an expansion of its existing Safe
Corridors program at the start of the 2013-2014 School Year. WalkSafePHL was created in response to safety concerns
of families and communities as students were prepared to attend schools that were outside of their neighborhoods
following the closing of 24 public schools in June 2013 (no additional closings since June 2013). By the end of 2014,
walk safe had 15 safe quarters at open schools his effort was spearheaded by TWIS which trained and certified
volunteers to provide a safe corridor for students as they travel to and from school. This program was designed in
collaboration with the Mayor’s Office of Civic Engagement and Volunteer Service, the Mayor’s Office of Education,
the Philadelphia Police Department, the PhillyRising Collaborative, the Office of Public Safety, the School District of
Philadelphia and SEPTA Police. Throughout the school year, 250 volunteers staffed 28 routes twice daily, creating a
safe pathway for children to travel to and from school. In 2014, Town Watch expanded to include new staff members
to manage the WalkSafePHL program, which included 45 schools, as requested by school principals. WalkSafePHL is
expected to expand in future years, as demand increases across the city. This marks a significant shift from 2008,
when Town Watch was a contracted entity with minimal integration into City government; now, Town Watch
operates as a full-fledged division of the Office of Public Safety.
Youth Violence Prevention Collaborative (YVPC): YVPC was created in 2012 when the U.S. Department of Justice’s
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention selected Philadelphia to be among the ten cities participating in
the National Forum on Youth Violence Prevention. The Forum is a network of communities and federal agencies that
work together, share information and build local capacity to prevent and reduce youth violence. The Forum brings
together people from diverse professions and perspectives to learn from each other about the crisis of youth and
gang violence and to build comprehensive solutions at the local and national levels.
Over 30 leaders from government, academia and other stakeholder groups in Philadelphia are part of the
Collaborative, which was initially co-chaired by Anne Marie Ambrose, former Commissioner of the Philadelphia
Department of Human Services, Kevin Dougherty, previously the Administrative Judge of the Family Court of
Philadelphia, and Charles Ramsey, Philadelphia Police Commissioner. Separate committees now meet regularly to
make progress on initiatives. The Collaborative members represent the city’s leadership across a wide cross-section of
disciplines in recognition that many factors contribute to and can alleviate youth violence.
In all, over 125 people have been involved in workgroups to create this plan, which is focused on the National Forum’s
priority strategies of Prevention, Intervention, Enforcement, Reentry and Data & Evaluation.
Successes of the Collaborative to date include stewarding funding for youth employment and after school
programming, as well as creating linkages between community based organizations and government agencies. The
Collaborative is reflective of the Nutter Administration’s place-based strategy, and works closely with both the Choice
Planning and Choice Implementation grant efforts.
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.8
Youth Violence Reduction Partnership: The Youth Violence Reduction Partnership (YVRP) currently serves roughly
1,050 youth per month between the ages of 14 and 24 years old. Youth are referred into YVRP through the juvenile
and adult probation programs and in most cases have been previously identified as high risk for committing and/or
being the victim of violence. YVRP operates by having probation officers and street workers from the Philadelphia
Anti-Drug/Anti-Violence Network (PAAN) contact the youth on a regular basis to provide evaluation, guidance and
social services support. Additionally YVRP offers participants comprehensive life and job readiness skills, coupled with
hands on paid internships in the communities in which they reside. The program has successfully served 234 Youth
Partners, with 85% receiving employment, 67 full time positions, 73 part time positions and 19 receiving seasonal
work. On average, the number of homicides fell 8% across the Six YVRP Police Districts (12th, 19th, 22nd, 39th, 24th
and 25th). Since FY08, YVRP has expanded the range of services available to participating youth, developing
partnerships in various communities with neighborhood organizations. Youth partners have participated in
FutureTrack and PowerCorps, transitional job training programs with the Streets, Parks and Recreation, and Water
departments, and YVRP has been a lead agency in developing the City’s youth safety strategic plan. In FY16, YVRP will
continue to evaluate expansion opportunities to additional police districts, the 35th statistically being in the forefront.
With the creation of a newly developed Intelligence Officer in Juvenile Probation, the efforts of YVRP will be enhanced
with the monitoring of social media linked to YVRP’s activities such as gang affiliations and retaliations linked to past
or present criminal activities.
Goal 3:
Animal Control (ACCT Philly):
The Animal Care and Control Team (ACCT Philly) has had record breaking success driving Philadelphia's animal shelter
euthanasia rate to its lowest in recorded history in calendar year 2014, a 29% decrease from the previous year. Pet
adoptions increased by 24% to 8,201 and the organization achieved yet another consecutive calendar year of
increased live exit rates for animals. The success has brought Philadelphia's animal control program national attention
and within the past year ACCT Philly was awarded nearly $2 million in direct and in-kind grant support to increase
lifesaving from national organizations. Handling around 30,000 animals annually, the shelter is the safety net for
Philadelphia’s lost and unwanted pets and an essential city service. Responding to assist the Philadelphia Police
Department, Department of Licenses and Inspections, the Philadelphia Sheriff's Office, the Health Department and
other city departments, ACCT Philly is an invaluable public health and safety department in the community. ACCT
Philly continues to have only 12 animal control officers responding to requests for service 24 hours a day, 365 days a
year, and the veterinary department provided nearly 10,000 spay and neuter surgeries, a 25% increase over the
previous year, to contribute to reducing Philadelphia's unwanted animal population.
In a record shattering year, euthanasia fell to a record low in 2014 at Philadelphia’s animal control shelter managed
by the nonprofit Animal Care and Control Team (ACCT Philly). The number of animals euthanized tumbled by 29%
from 10,355 in 2013 to 7,383 (or 26% of incoming animals of all types) in 2014, a reduction of nearly 3,000 animals.
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.9
2014 saw the grand opening of the Everyday Adoption Center in PetSmart, Plymouth Meeting with housing for both
dogs and cats made possible by PetSmart Charities Inc. Through this and ACCT Philly’s other adoption locations and
adoption events, adoptions hit a six year high with just over 8,200 placements.
Goal 5:
Building Capabilities through the Center of Excellence:
The Center of Excellence (COE) within the Managing Director’s Office was started in November 2012 to help City
departments and agencies to operate more efficiently and effectively, in alignment with the Mayor’s Strategic Goal 5.
The focus for the COE is organizational development, project management, performance management and the City’s
Returning to Learning Tuition Discount program. The work is accomplished through training, consulting engagements
with departments and agencies, PhillyStat meetings and managing the Returning to Learning Tuition Discount
program relationships. The City has budgeted $250,000 annually starting in FY14 to fund the Center of Excellence and
succession planning efforts. Since November 2013, this unit has made significant contributions in each of its primary
areas:
• Consulting engagements with departments to solve business problems: The COE has completed 33
significant consulting engagements for City departments and agencies in the areas of strategic planning,
change management, team building, leadership retreats, employee surveys, citizen surveys, executive
coaching, comparative analysis benchmarking, performance evaluation and focus groups to name a few.
These projects generally cover several months and substantial hours of COE time.
• Work with departments to develop their succession planning: The COE has also built a succession planning
toolkit that departments and agencies can use to identify the most critical roles and choose from a robust set
of strategies to address impending vacancies. Based on a survey to all exempt employees in December, we
have identified additional programs requested by these employees to enhance their skills.
• Creating and delivering training and development to enhance employee and organizational performance:
COE has developed three multi-day development programs with Drexel University and Immaculata University
in the areas of Leadership Development, Supervisory Skills and Intermediate Project Management as well as
several more focused programs in an effort to enhance the most critically identified skills. To date, the COE
has delivered over 4,000 hours of training to over 500 employees across virtually every City department and
agency. This training has covered areas such as project management, performance management, leadership,
supervision and public speaking. The COE is bringing 10 additional program offerings to employees in FY15.
COE has also supported the educational efforts of City employees through the Mayor’s Returning to Learning
Partnership, which allows City employees to pursue a college education by taking advantage of the tuition discount
program offered by local area colleges and universities. Employees receive a 25% discount or more on tuition for
each course for which they enroll and in some cases may also receive a full or partial scholarship to attend certain
institutions. Initially run by the Mayor’s Office of Education, the program is now housed in the COE. While privacy
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.10
concerns do not permit us access to the exact number of employees participating in the program, more than 500
employees have expressed interest through our online survey, are actively participating or have graduated. More
than 400 employees regularly receive information about the program and participate in program events. The COE has
also increased the number of schools participating in the program to 16 local colleges and universities.
Additionally, the COE has provided employees with access to additional tools to continue the learning process
including individual assessment tools used in the leadership development program and Get Abstract, a service that
provides electronic access to thousands of business books in a condensed format. This service is available to all
participants of the COE development programs.
Philly311: Philly311 serves the citizens of Philadelphia by providing courteous, fast and accurate customer service,
resulting in transparent access to government information and services. In addition to the 311 call center, the
Philly311 mobile app, social media, and web-self-service. Philly311 maintains the Neighborhood Liaison Program
(NLP) that consists of people in Philadelphia communities who are passionate about improving the quality of life for
them and their neighbors. The Philly311 contact center continues to maintain a high customer satisfaction rating; 85%
as of the end of the second quarter of 2015. As of March 2015, Philly311 is short-listed to receive the 2015 United
Nations Public Service Award. The official announcement of winners of the 2015 UNPSA will be made in May 2015.
During FY11, Philly311 implemented the Police Mobile Device Program that enables officers on the street to report
quality of life issues. Over 900 Police Officers have been trained on use of the program as of December 2014.
The Philly311 mobile application (app) was launched in September 2012 and is the first civic engagement app to offer
translations in 16 languages other than English. Part of its functionality allows the City to place widgets covering
timely and relevant topics such as Licenses and Inspections Property History, Excessive Weather, and Earth Day onto
the home screen of the app. Widgets may be easily added, edited and removed to enable timely topics to be
featured. During the past year examples of, Philly 311 featured two widgets: one that helps customers find free
computer training and access, and an after school widget. The latter was the winner of a social media contest inviting
the public to help develop a civic engagement widget. A push notification feature has been added that enables alerts
to be sent to the over 24,000 users of the app which has a rating of 4 out of 5 stars and has won several City Paper Big
Vision Awards. Over 27,000 service requests have been submitted via the mobile app representing a 47% increase
from 2013. The Philly311 mobile app accounts for over 18% of customer contacts. This surpasses all other non-call
channels by 66%.
Philly 311 continues to use social media as a tool for dynamic and responsive engagement with Philadelphia‘s citizens.
As of February 2015, Philly 311 has nearly 15,000 followers on Twitter, a 46% increase compared to February 2014.
Philly 311 also has over 2,350 followers on Facebook, an increase of 44% from 2013.
The Philly311 social media team continues to showcase effective social media that connects customers and City
government. The team has trained several internal City departments and external stakeholders, and team members
have been keynote speakers at local, national and international conferences related to this topic and innovative
government. Philly311 continues to blog and produce videos that educate, empower and engage its customers.
The Philly311 Neighborhood Liaison Program (NLP) has trained approximately 1,200 people since implementation.
Additionally, three Youth Liaison Program pilots with over 120 participants ages 12-18 were successfully implemented
in 2014. Through a partnership with Drexel University and KEYSPOTS, Philly311 secured approximately 30 computer
mobile labs enabling Philly311 to take NLP training into the communities.
In FY14, Philly311 kicked off the implementation phase of a new Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system.
The customer service system uses state of the art technology to improve internal operations processing times,
increase first time call resolution and provide customers with better communication regarding the status of their
requests. The CRM also uses a GIS mapping system that helps identify and alert service delivery departments of
duplicate requests by verifying the address and logging additional calls for the same issue to one work order.
Moreover, the GIS capability will facilitate more efficient travel routes for resolving issues and delivering services. The
cloud-based solution provides additional features that enable the City government to connect more effectively with
customers. Full implementation is expected to be completed in FY16.
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.11
Philly311 has also received the Citizen Engaged Designation from the Public Technology Institute for consecutive two
years terms since 2009. In FY15, Philly311 received the Public Technology Institute’s Most Engaged Citizen
Designation for the fourth consecutive two year term. The designation acknowledges ongoing efforts to connect and
engage City government and the public via outreach programs, the 311 mobile app, social media, blogs, interactive
website, videos, and The Philly311 Show.
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.12
STAFFING
Staff Demographics (as of December 2014)
Full-Time Staff
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Executive Staff
Male
Female
Male
Female
African-American
69
27.1%
White
65
25.5%
Hispanic
15
5.9%
Asian
0
0.0%
Other
2
0.8%
Bi-lingual
0
0.0%
Male
151
59.2%
African-American
55
21.6%
White
33
12.9%
Hispanic
12
4.7%
Asian
2
0.8%
Other
2
0.8%
Bi-lingual
0
0.0%
Female
104
40.8%
African-American
1
14.3%
White
1
14.3%
Hispanic
1
14.3%
Asian
0
0.0%
Other
1
14.3%
Bi-lingual
1
14.3%
Male
4
57.1%
African-American
3
42.9%
White
0
0.0%
Hispanic
0
0.0%
Asian
0
0.0%
Other
0
0.0%
Bi-lingual
0
0.0%
Female
3
42.9%
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
Total
% of Total
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.13
CONTRACTING
M/W/DBE Participation on Large Contracts
FY15 Contracts
Vendor
Service Provided
Defender
Association
of
Philadelphia
Legal services to
indigent and
underrepresented
individuals
Animal Care
& Control
Team
Animal control
services
Education
Works, Inc.
PowerCorps
PHL/AmeriCorps
green-job training
program
Philadelphia
Mural Arts
Advocates
Creation and
restoration of
murals and public
art projects
Support
Center for
Child
Advocates
Legal services to
indigent and
underrepresented
children/youth
Amount of
Contract
$40,321,835
$3,889,942
$1,997,533
$964,300
$804,000
RFP Issue
Date
7/1/10
Exempt
Exempt
Exempt
5/6/13
Contract
Start
Date
7/1/14
7/1/14
7/1/14
8/6/14
7/1/14
% of
M/W/DBE
Participation
Achieved
$ Value of
M/W/DBE
Participation
MBE:
0%
$0
DSBE:
0%
$0
Ranges
in RFP
WBE:
MBE:
WBE:
DSBE:
MBE:
WBE:
DSBE:
MBE:
WBE:
DSBE:
MBE:
WBE:
DSBE:
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
$0
Total % and $
Value
Participation All DSBEs
0%
$0
0%
$0
0%
$0
0%
$0
0%
$0
Living
Wage
Compliant?
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.14
OTHER BUDGETARY IMPACTS
FEDERAL AND STATE (WHERE APPLICABLE)
N/A
OTHER
N/A
MANAGING DIRECTOR’S OFFICE | FY16 BUDGET TESTIMONY | p.15